70 S.E. 919 | N.C. | 1911
This action was brought to enjoin the defendant from cutting down a row of shade trees standing on the outer edge of the sidewalk in front of plaintiff's residence in Greenville, for the purpose of widening Fifth Street. The court, after having granted a temporary restraining order, refused to continue it to the final hearing, and the plaintiff appealed. In the complaint and also in the argument before us, the plaintiff bases his right to injunctive relief upon the following grounds:
(1) The defendant does not own any easement in or title to the strip of land now used as a sidewalk in front of the plaintiff's property along Fifth Street or in the street.
(2) The defendant town has not instituted condemnation proceedings, and the removal of the trees in question is without due process of law.
(3) The public interest does not demand the widening of Fifth Street, and the removal of the trees and the widening of the street, as ordered by the board of aldermen of the town of Greenville, is unnecessary.
(4) The plaintiff is entitled to have an appraisement of his (493) damages before the trees are removed and the street is widened. *390
(5) The board of aldermen of the defendant town, in passing the order directing the widening of Fifth Street, which is set out in the defendant's answer in the record, are attempting "without due process of law, negligently, wantonly, and without necessary procedure, and carelessly, arbitrarily, capriciously, and oppressively to cut down and remove plaintiff's shade trees."
1. There is ample evidence in the case to show that the owners of the land abutting on what is called Fifth Street had dedicated the land embraced by it to the public use, for the purpose of a street, and that the town had accepted the offer of dedication by actual user for many years and exercising authority over it as one of its public thoroughfares. S. v.Fisher,
2. It was not necessary that the plaintiff should have been notified and allowed a hearing before the order of the board directing that Fifth Street be widened and improved was passed. It may be regarded as settled law that the power to take private property for public uses belongs to every independent government exercising sovereign power, for it is a necessary incident to its sovereignty, and requires, therefore, no constitutional recognition. U.S. v. Jones,
Lewis in his treatise on Eminent Domain, sec. 456, says that in most States, and by the greater weight of authority, it is held that the making of compensation need not precede an entry upon property, provided some definite provision is made whereby the owner will certainly obtain compensation for the loss of his property, using that word in its most extensive sense, as indicating injury to any of his property rights. He classifies the courts thus holding, and assigns this Court to a place with the large majority. The dissenting courts were influenced in their decisions either by some peculiar local law or held that the owner of property required for public use should not be compelled to part with it without some adequate assurance that he will receive compensation, and should not be made to take any risk of compensation; but in this respect our decisions fully protect him by allowing the courts to require security for the ultimate payment of damages, to be given in proper cases before the entry upon the land. Phifer v. R. R., supra; R. R. v. R. R., supra;Cherokee Nation v. R. R.,
3. The plaintiff further contends that the public interest does not demand that the street be widened and the trees destroyed, as ordered by the board. Eminent domain is the right or power of a sovereign State to appropriate private property to particular uses, for the purpose of promoting the public welfare. 1 Lewis Em. Dom., sec. 1. Being an essential attribute of sovereignty, it is exercised by the people through the Legislature, to which it has been delegated. The time and manner of its exercise must, from its very nature, be left to the discretion and wisdom of that body. When conferred upon some subordinate municipal body, the same discretion necessarily resides in it. Referring to the questions which may arise in the procedure for the condemnation of private property for public use, we find in Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 366, the following rule: "All questions relating to the exercise of the eminent domain power, which are political in their nature and rest in the exclusive control and discretion of the Legislature, may be determined without notice to the owner of the property to be affected. Whether the particular work or improvement shall be made, or the particular property taken, are questions of this character, and the owner is not entitled to a hearing thereon as a matter of right. `The commissioners, in determining this preliminary question of the necessity of appropriating lands for the purposes of a ditch, are called to the exercise of political and not judicial powers. It is a question rather of public policy than of private right. It is not upon the question of the appropriation of lands for public use, but upon that of compensation (498) for lands so appropriated, that the owner is entitled, of right, to a hearing in court, and the verdict of a jury.'" Zimmerman v.Canfield,
The liability of a municipal corporation for negligence in the construction of public works and in making improvements in its streets is fully considered in several cases decided by this Court. Jones v.Henderson,
The judge found as a fact that there had been no abuse of the defendant's discretion in ordering this street to be widened and no oppression on its part of the plaintiff, and we are not disposed, upon the proof now before us, to change this finding. But while we so rule, and our decision must be against the plaintiff, there are some facts and circumstances which should make the defendants pause and consider, and to decide after greater reflection, whether they are being really just to the plaintiff in the manner of exercising their discretion, and whether, without impairing in the least the public interest, which must be first considered, there is not some way by which that interest can be fully subserved, and the trees, which afford shade and comfort to the plaintiff's home left standing. If, in the fair and honest exercise of *396 (501) their judgment, no plan can be thus devised, the trees must be sacrificed for the public good, for it is one of the first maxims of government and the law that private convenience must yield to that of the public (privatum commodum publico cedit), and such a private loss must seek, and can only find, its just compensation in the corresponding public benefit (privatum incommodum publico bono pensatur). It appears by the evidence and the map filed in the case, that if the present plan of improvement is not altered the trees will obstruct the roadway, as that part of the sidewalk where they now stand will become a part of the street between the curbs. We would hesitate to interfere with the exercise of the sound judgment of those who have the matter in their charge, except in an extreme case indicating bad faith, malice, or wantonness, for they are trustees of the public, and as such, vested with a very large discretion, as we have shown; but they should discharge their duty to the public with as little injury to the citizen as is possible under the circumstances.
We must not be understood as intending to interfere with the free exercise of the discretionary power conferred upon the commissioners of the town, but as merely suggesting that while their discretion should be exercised primarily in favor of the public welfare, their duty is not so limited in its sphere that the citizen is not entitled to some consideration. We can not control the exercise of their judgment upon matters of a legislative or administrative character, unless, as we have said, they act fraudulently, maliciously, or wantonly, and, instead of trying to promote the public good in the execution of the trust and confidence reposed in them, they seek to injure and oppress the citizen and deprive him of his property under the form of law.
Section 23, chapter 85, Laws 1885, placing restrictions upon the right of condemnation for street purposes in Greenville, has no bearing on the case, as the Legislature does not, in such a way, surrender its power of eminent domain. Nichols on Em. Dom., sec. 315. That act has been repealed by the subsequent charter of the town and the amendment thereto, at least in so far as they conflict with it, and the repeal was within the legitimate exercise of legislative authority. Elliott on Roads and Streets (2 Ed.), sec. 186 and note 2.
We must declare that there is no error in the judgment.
Affirmed.
Cited: Bailey v. Winston,
(502)